Diversity Hub
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42 results found.
UC San Francisco is one of 22 universities with Institutional Research and Career Development Award (IRACDA) programs funded by NIH/NIGMS. IRACDA Scholars receive mentored research and teaching training at major research institutions partnered with a teaching-intensive institution with a demonstrated commitment to outreach. UCSF's partner is San Francisco State University.
UCSF Learners Open to All Underrepresented Minorities
LGBT First Generation to College Female People with Disabilities Academic Outreach Research Community Building Education/Training Grant/Scholarship/Fellowship Mentorship
For more information contact us:
Contact
Anne Sufka
Email address
Phone
415-514-9434
Website
Deadline
1-Apr-18
Duration
IRACDA Scholars participate in this 4-year career development program in which Scholars appoint to the program in August-October of their first year of postdoctoral training.
Participation
Application
Location
UCSF Parnassus
UCSF Mission Bay
PRIME hosts 4-5 health pipeline organizations to come and visit the UCSF campus during the summer. We have current partners that we invite, Mentoring in Medicine and Science, Huckleberry Youth Wellness Academy, San Francisco State Summer Science Institute, FACES for the Future. PRIME students work with the coordinators of the pipeline programs to develop a site visit that is in line with the interests of their programs. Some typical activities include a tour, a medical student panel, specimen/organ hands-on activity. Each program visits UCSF once for about 3 hours.
K-12 Community Members Underrepresented Minorities
First Generation to College Academic Outreach Community Building Mentorship UCSF Medicine
For more information contact us:
Contact
Aisha Queen -Johnson
Email address
Phone
415 307-4077
Website
Duration
Summer Annually
Location
UCSF Parnassus
The Innovators in Young Women's Health Program (Innovators) is a 10-month health and leadership training program which empowers young women to create a project that uniquely addresses young women's health needs specific to their school community. Innovators are hired by the UCSF National Center of Excellence in Women's Health. Innovators is based on a positive youth development approach that emphasizes each girl's strengths and / assets. Working in teams, students develop a project for their school and implement it with the assistance of an adult ally in the school (wellness center staff, nurse, teacher, etc.). Innovators concludes in May with a celebration during which each team presents their projects.
K-12 Underrepresented Minorities LGBT
First Generation to College Female People with Disabilities Community Building Education/Training Mentorship UCSF Medicine
For more information contact us:
Contact
Kimberlynn Acevedo
Email address
Phone
415-885-3848
Participation
Application
Location
UCSF Mt. Zion
The Youth Steering Committee (YSC) is a young women's health and leadership program for a group of diverse high school girls from SF public and charter schools. The YSC works together for 9 months to explore young women's health issues and to create a health & leadership summit for other high school girls. The YSC is based on a positive youth development philosophy which emphasizes the strengths and assets of young women and encourages them to see themselves as leaders among their peers, within their schools, and throughout their community. The YSC is designed to be a safe place where young women can come together to share their thoughts and ideas, develop self-confidence, and build leadership skills.
K-12 Underrepresented Minorities LGBT
First Generation to College Female People with Disabilities Community Building Education/Training Mentorship UCSF Medicine
For more information contact us:
Contact
Kimberlynn Acevedo
Email address
Phone
415-885-3848
Deadline
18-Apr
Duration
August 2018 - April 2019
Participation
Application
Location
National
UCSF Mt. Zion
he National Institute for General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) Initiative for Maximizing Student Development (IMSD) Fellows and Affiliates Program at UCSF is designed to support historically underrepresented and marginalized PhD students in basic science graduates programs. UCSF’s first IMSD grant was awarded in 1997, which supports selected students in the first two years of their graduate studies. To date, over 100 students have benefited from an IMSD Fellows and Affiliates Program at UCSF.
UCSF Learners Underrepresented Minorities Community Building
Fellowship Mentorship UCSF Graduate Division
For more information contact us:
We in the department of Neurosurgery are working in partnership with the non-profit organization Oasis for Girls to offer paid internship programs for underserved high school female youth of color (ages 14-18) to expose them to medical and healthcare professional careers with mentorship, career path exploration, and professional development through hospital rotations in labs, the OR, and other academic or healthcare locations, with research projects, presentations, and interactive activities. We accept a group of 15-18 youth per cycle with 3 application / intern cycles per year. We are expanding our programs to reach other demographics (e.g. young Black males, LGBTQ+ youth, college pre-med students). Altogether these programs are housed under the title Neurosurgery Community Internship Programs (NCIP).
K-12 Community Members Open to the Public
Open to All Underrepresented Minorities LGBT First Generation to College Female People with Disabilities Academic Community Building Education/Training Mentorship Outreach Research Volunteer UCSF Medicine
For more information contact us:
Contact
Marisa McFarlane
Email address
Phone
415-514-8657
Deadline
Seasonal (Spring, Summer, Fall)
Duration
4 weeks, 4:30p - 6:30p in Spring / Fall, 2p-6p in Summer
Participation
Application
Location
UCSF Parnassus
San Francisco
The annual two-day workshop is an intensive and interactive meeting designed to provide mid-level and senior faculty in HIV research with the tools for more effective mentoring, especially of mentees of diversity (defined mainly as those from underrepresented racial/ethnic minorities). The workshops discusses barriers related to being an early career investigator of diversity (e.g. microaggressions, unconscious bias), and features didactic and interactive sessions on practical tips for mentoring, including sessions on distance mentoring, funding sources for mentoring efforts, time management, manuscript writing, grant writing, individual development plans, teaching work-life balance to mentees, alternative funding strategies, etc.
UCSF Faculty Underrepresented Minorities Academic
Research Mentorship UCSF Medicine
For more information contact us:
Contact
Steve May
Email address
Phone
415-476-4082 x 138
Participation
Application
Location
UCSF Mission Bay
The UC Davis - UC Merced San Joaquin Valley Program in Medical Education (SJV PRIME) is an innovative approach to training future physicians, a pathway that will emphasize quality of care anchored in community-based research and educational experiences. The diversity of the San Joaquin Valley, including health systems, diverse patient populations and broad community partnerships, is a core component of the effort to improve the health and health care of the region. The SJV PRIME program is a collaboration between the UC Davis School of Medicine, UC Merced and UCSF Fresno, to train the next generation of San Joaquin Valley physicians. It seeks to increase the diversity of the medical profession and remedy the uneven distribution of physicians in California. SJV PRIME is a tailored clinical track at the UC Davis School of Medicine for medical students who are committed to ensuring high quality, diverse and well distributed medical care to improve health for populations, communities, and individuals in California's San Joaquin Valley.
Undergrad Underrepresented Minorities First Generation to College
Outreach Research Service Learning Certificate/Degree Program Education/Training Mentorship UCSF Medicine
For more information contact us:
Contact
Grace Carlson
Email address
Phone
559-499-6527
Participation
Application
Location
California
Underrepresented in Medicine (UIM) provides racial and ethnic minority students, students from lower-income households, and students who are the first in their family to attend medical school easy access to mentoring. UIM and its mentoring project aim to provide targeted experiences to 1st and 2nd year medical students with less inherent medical experience before they start 3rd year and are evaluated (in part) on their medical school cultural knowledge on the wards. We aim to begin providing this advantage by facilitating mentorship from physicians from all across the Bay Area. These volunteers will donate their time to invest in the next generation of medical professionals, and bestow in them the institutional knowledge, wisdom and emotional support they have acquired throughout their years in medicine.
UCSF Learners Underrepresented Minorities Outreach
Mentorship UCSF Medicine
For more information contact us:
Email address
Website
Participation
Open Invitation
Location
UCSF Parnassus
Twenty high school students come to UCSF each summer to conduct biomedical research under the guidance of a scientist mentor. Program received the Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics, and Engineering Mentoring in 2011. This program is currently funded by the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, Silicon Valley Community Foundation, and the Baskin Family Foundation.
UCSF Learners UCSF Faculty K-12
Open to All Underrepresented Minorities First Generation to College Academic Education/Training Mentorship
For more information contact us:
Contact
Rebecca Smith
Email address
Deadline
Spring annually
Duration
Early June to early August annually
Participation
Application
Location
UCSF Parnassus
UCSF Mission Bay